I don't think my school realizes all AP tests versions are the same

<p>The only room big enough for my poorly budgeted school to fit an AP test is the "conference" room, a room with about 150 seats, spaced so close that if I held my hand out, I would be hitting my neighbor in the face. And my school gets substitute teachers, old ladies, and people I honestly think are also janitors at my school to proctor. And the proctors give us two minutes to pass our tests to the far left of the room at the end of the test, plenty of time for a couple of glances. Needless to say, much is going on! Just felt like sharing.</p>

<p>Lol, yeah ours are pretty close too and I all have to do is glance to the front, left or right, but I haven’t exactly felt the need to cheat. haha</p>

<p>Hah good thing I don’t need to cheat…I’m the only one taking most of my exams at my school.</p>

<p>squadus you saying looking to the front reminds me. I forgot to mention that the rows of seats in the room are layered like stairs, so if I look down in front of me I can see my classmate’s whole test. I don’t need to cheat on the MC, but I’m not very good in essays. I wish it was the other way around considering my school haha.</p>

<p>for big exams like english language and apush, they fill up the gym entirely with rows and rows of desks, it’s really weird.</p>

<p>for my ap french language exam though, since there were only 9 of us, we were in a small conference room with big padded desk chairs. it was awesome.</p>

<p>150 kids taking the same AP test??</p>

<p>that’s more than half of my school’s total student population</p>

<p>hah.</p>

<p>oh…dude…im taking that in a CHURCH…so how could you cheat in a church?lol
and we only have 15 taking CAL today…and im the only one who took BC…</p>

<p>for cheating…anyway, it could happen everywhere, this world itself is unfair.
just be honest yourself=]</p>

<p>Actually…
I thouhght they were the same…
but
the person who was next to me had the same form
but when I GLANCED (unintentionally) I saw his graph problem was on the diff side of the booklet…
so I think that some forms are in different order </p>

<p>yeah…i def dont think ets is that stupid</p>

<p>I don’t have to worry about any problems like being seated in a room full of kids. You know why because out of the whole school I am the only one taking AP exams. lol</p>

<p>i think that the versions are only different if there is an additional letter after the form code. it’s normally 4FBP i think, but for example, calculus today was 4FBP-Q or 4FBP-R. other than calculus, i don’t recall encountering any other tests with different forms.</p>